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- Alone: Deep Space: Engineer Kaya Torres (Steph Barkley) is marooned in a
rescue pod niear a black hole, with the pod holding just enough
power to withstand the black hole's gravity. Then unexpectedly,
she receives a radio call from a cartologist called Hammer (Thomas
Wilson Brown), marooned on a planet she has never even heard of,
and over the radio, the two become quick friends. But then, Kaya
is shocked to find out where Hammer's actually calling from ...
- Cradle: Ever since her mum has disappeared, Eade (Jaqueline
Joe) lives on a spaceship with just her dad (Matthew Sunderland), who warns her to ever return to
earth again. But when dad's knocked out and in desperate need of
surgery, Eade finds out quite a few things her dad has kept from
her ...
- Lunatique: Earth is a ravaged planet, and she (Lila
Guimarães) is one of the few human survivors of whatever has happened.
So every night she steels her body to during the day go out
salvaging whatever she might need for survival, armed to the
teeth. But there are other creatures out there who want to survive
as well ...
- New Mars: On an experimental colony on Mars, its mostly
teenaged population is supposed to function like machines, down to
the point where they are coupled on strictly logical grounds. But
two youngsters (Katie Simmons, Levi Payne) start to encounter feelings for one another ...
- AI-pocalypse: Dr. Stephen (John Henry Richardson) has
developed android Sonya (Jiao Xu) to fill the hole the death of
his daughter has left. But military general Brian (Arthur Roberts)
has other plans for her, wanting to use her to win the brewing
World War ...
A nice collection of science fiction shorts from all over the world,
and even if not all of them strictly deal with the apocalypse as such,
they all have a dystopian touch to them, and honestly said might not be
the films most likely to lift one's mood - but that's more in theme than
execution, as they're all well-written, look pretty polished and feature
fine ensemble casts, making this a sci-fi anthology well worth a look.
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